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Gate-Transformer Driver (GDT): Push-Pull Primary, Sync Secondary

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Gate-Transformer Driver is a high-isolation gate-drive approach that delivers strong, fast switching pulses through a transformer, and it wins when dv/dt is harsh and common-mode coupling must be minimized. The core success condition is guaranteed volt-second balance and reset plus matched secondary networks, so Vgs amplitude, droop, skew, and dv/dt immunity remain within acceptance limits.

H2-1. Gate-Transformer Driver — Definition & When It Wins

A gate-transformer driver (GDT) transfers gate-drive energy across an isolation barrier using magnetic coupling. It excels in high dv/dt and pulsed environments, but it imposes hard constraints on duty-cycle balance, droop, reset, and channel matching.

Scope Boundary

Coverage: push-pull excitation, volt-second balance & reset, droop mechanisms, transformer parasitics, synchronous secondary networks, channel symmetry, dv/dt coupling paths, and layout/validation hooks specific to GDT drive.

Out of scope: general digital isolator theory, isolated driver IC internals, and detailed DESAT/UVLO mechanisms. If protection behavior must be programmable and self-contained inside the driver chain, isolated driver ICs typically fit better.

Use It When (3 decision triggers)

  • Common-mode stress is extreme (fast switching nodes, large dv/dt) and the goal is to minimize capacitive injection into the control side. GDT drive can reduce sensitivity to electric-field coupling, especially when the winding structure and return paths are controlled.
  • Very high isolation is required and the gate side must remain floating and robust under pulsed operation. Magnetic coupling supports high isolation stacks while keeping the signal path simple.
  • Drive behavior is pulse-dominant (short on/off transitions and bounded on-time) rather than “DC gate level hold”. GDT constraints align naturally with pulsed and RF-like drive patterns.

Don’t Use It When (3 hard stop conditions)

  • Long gate-level hold is mandatory (very high effective duty, near-DC on-time). Without guaranteed reset, volt-second imbalance drives flux walk → saturation → gate amplitude collapse.
  • Protection and diagnostics must be integrated and feature-rich inside the driver chain (advanced fault state machines, telemetry, programmable blanking). GDT systems often require more external protection architecture and validation discipline.
  • Multi-channel symmetry cannot be controlled (winding mismatch, inconsistent secondary networks, uncontrolled gate loop differences), especially in half-/full-bridge hard-switching where turn-off strength and delay matching define shoot-through risk.

Decision Gate (engineering thresholds)

The following gates are meant to be auditable. Replace X/Y/N with program-specific targets after bench correlation.

Switching pattern
Favor GDT when the drive pattern is pulse-dominant. If the design requires sustained “gate-high hold” for > X% effective duty, require a documented reset window and measured droop margin.
Max effective duty
Set a target such as Deff,max ≤ X% unless reset is guaranteed by symmetry and timing. Verify no flux walk across temperature and component tolerance.
Gate droop budget
Define a droop spec: ΔVG ≤ X V within Y µs at worst-case gate charge and frequency. Use Kelvin gate-source measurement to avoid false “good Vg” readings.
Channel matching
For multi-switch stages, require inter-channel skew ≤ X ns and Vg amplitude mismatch ≤ Y% (turn-on and turn-off assessed separately). Symmetry is a power-stage spec.
dv/dt environment
If the switching node dv/dt is high, treat coupling paths as first-class constraints. Require a defined return strategy, controlled interwinding capacitance, and a verified “no false turn-on” test plan (X kV/µs).
Three ways to drive an isolated high-side Comparison block diagram highlighting signal path, bias power path, and isolation barrier placement. A) Bootstrap HS Driver B) Isolated Driver IC C) Gate Transformer Driver Signal Bias/Power PWM Controller HS Driver Bootstrap C High-Side Switch PWM Controller Isolated Driver IC Signal + Isolation Barrier Isolated DC-DC High-Side Switch PWM Controller Push-Pull Primary Gate Transformer Magnetic Isolation Barrier High-Side Switch Compare paths: signal (blue) vs bias/power (dark). Isolation barrier placement drives system trade-offs.

Figure 1 — Three isolated high-side drive approaches. The key differentiator is where the isolation barrier sits and how bias energy reaches the gate side.

H2-2. Topology Overview: Push-Pull Primary + Synchronous Secondary

The topology is best understood as two coordinated subsystems: (1) a symmetric primary excitation that guarantees reset margin, and (2) a secondary network that shapes gate current, clamps overshoot, and enforces a strong, repeatable turn-off path.

Canonical Architecture (functional blocks)

  • Primary driver stage: creates balanced push-pull excitation (symmetry is the first safety constraint).
  • Gate drive transformer (GDT): provides magnetic isolation and sets droop + parasitic behavior.
  • Per-switch secondary network: rectifies/shapes drive, enables fast discharge, and clamps gate stress.
  • Gate interface: split Rg,on / Rg,off, optional clamp, optional −Vg rail (if required by the risk model).
  • Return reference: Kelvin gate-source return is mandatory for valid Vg measurement and repeatable behavior.

Deep formulas (core selection and volt-second math) are intentionally deferred to the operating-principle chapter. This chapter locks the block-level blueprint and the “where current flows” view.

Primary Driver Stage Options (selection by constraints)

Primary excitation choices are not “feature picks”; they set symmetry control, device stress, and bring-up friction. Keep the comparison on three axes only (avoid drifting into magnetics math here).

  • Push-pull: strong symmetry potential, efficient excitation; demands careful balance and reset discipline.
  • Half-bridge / full-bridge: can improve controllability and stress distribution; increases complexity and layout sensitivity.
  • Per-channel primary segmentation: improves channel isolation and matching at the cost of parts and routing complexity.

Synchronous Secondary Networks (three implementation families)

“Synchronous secondary” describes enforcing a controlled turn-off current path and gate clamp behavior that remains consistent across channels and operating corners. The implementation can be grouped into three families:

  • Diode steering / passive shaping: simplest and robust; turn-off strength and ringing control depend heavily on parasitics and placement.
  • Active synchronous discharge / clamp: tight control of turn-off and overshoot; demands disciplined layout and validated fault modes.
  • Bidirectional drive + optional −Vg: strongest immunity in high dv/dt environments; requires a clean return reference and strict channel symmetry.

The critical validation question is not “which circuit is used”, but “whether the gate discharge path is low-impedance, repeatable, and channel-matched under dv/dt stress.”

Standard GDT topology blueprint Block diagram showing push-pull primary excitation feeding a gate drive transformer. Each secondary channel shapes gate current using split resistors and clamp, with a Kelvin return reference. PWM / Logic Push-Pull Primary Balanced excitation Gate Transformer Magnetic isolation Barrier Per-Switch Secondary Shaping / Steering Rg,on Rg,off Clamp / Fast Discharge Optional −Vg Rail Power Switch Gate Kelvin return reference Key constraint Symmetry + reset

Figure 2 — Standard GDT blueprint. The secondary network and Kelvin return define turn-off strength, ringing behavior, and dv/dt robustness.

H2-3. Operating Principle: Volt-Second Balance, Reset, and Why Duty-Cycle Matters

In a gate-transformer driver (GDT), predictable gate voltage depends on flux returning to its starting point every cycle. Volt-second imbalance causes flux walk, pushes the core toward saturation, and can collapse gate amplitude and turn-off strength.

Key Concepts (must-have vocabulary)

  • Volt-second (V·s): time-integral of applied primary voltage. Any net imbalance accumulates into flux walk.
  • Magnetizing current (Im): current that establishes flux in the core. A rising Im trend indicates shrinking reset margin.
  • Reset window: time and polarity that drive flux back toward the initial point. Missing reset accelerates bias buildup.
  • Core saturation symptoms: primary current spikes, gate amplitude collapse, increased channel divergence, abnormal temperature rise.

Scope rule: this chapter defines the physics constraints and validation gates only. Detailed parasitic attribution and ringing paths are handled in the equivalent-model chapter.

Causal Chain (why duty-cycle is not “free”)

  1. Balanced excitation requires complementary pulses with matched effective volt-seconds.
  2. Any imbalance (duty, amplitude, timing, load asymmetry) creates a non-zero net volt-second per cycle.
  3. Net volt-second accumulates into flux walk (bias shift), moving the operating point toward saturation.
  4. Approaching saturation reduces effective magnetizing inductance, forcing magnetizing current to surge.
  5. Gate delivery collapses: secondary headroom drops → Vg droop grows → turn-off margin shrinks and timing mismatches amplify.

Hard Rules (auditable gates with X/Y placeholders)

Rule 1 — Max Effective Duty

Rule: Max effective duty ≤ X% unless reset is guaranteed by symmetry and timing.

Quick check: at worst-case duty, confirm no cycle-to-cycle rise in primary current peak and no drift in Vg peak.

Fix knobs: enforce complementary pulse balance, ensure reset window, add explicit reset path if needed.

Pass criteria: primary peak current trend ≈ flat over N cycles and Vg amplitude drift ≤ Y%.

Rule 2 — Gate Droop Budget

Rule: ΔVg droop ≤ X V within Y ns/µs during worst-case on-time.

Quick check: measure Vg(t) using Kelvin gate-source; record droop slope and end-of-pulse Vg.

Fix knobs: increase effective Lm margin, reduce secondary impedance, strengthen discharge/clamp paths.

Pass criteria: droop meets X/Y and channel-to-channel droop mismatch ≤ Z%.

Rule 3 — Complementary Pulse Balance

Rule: imbalance between complementary pulses ≤ X% (effective pulse area).

Quick check: capture both primary phases; compare effective pulse width and amplitude across corners.

Fix knobs: tighten timing alignment, match drive strength, remove asymmetry in primary path and loading.

Pass criteria: area difference ≤ X% from cold to hot, and from min to max supply.

Measurement rule: Vg must be probed across Kelvin gate-source. Non-Kelvin probing can falsely report “good Vg” while actual gate margin is poor.

Fast Saturation Signatures (field-usable)

  • Primary peak current grows with duty → reset window is shrinking or pulse balance is drifting.
  • Vg collapses abruptly at certain duty/temperature → operating point is near saturation boundary.
  • Channels diverge over time → small imbalance is integrating into flux walk; symmetry is insufficient.
  • Ringing worsens as duty increases → parasitic resonance is being excited harder; proceed to equivalent-model attribution.
Volt-second balance and reset determine Vg stability Left panel shows balanced complementary pulses with flux returning to baseline and controlled Vg droop. Right panel shows imbalance causing flux walk and worse droop/collapse risk. Balanced (Reset OK) Imbalanced (Flux Walk) Primary Phase A Primary Phase B Core Flux ϕ(t) Secondary Vg(t) Primary Phase A Primary Phase B Core Flux ϕ(t) Secondary Vg(t) A pulses (area matched) B pulses (area matched) Reset window Vg droop A pulses (area drift) B pulses (mismatch) Flux walk Droop grows Duty-cycle impacts reset margin → flux behavior → Vg droop and turn-off safety margin

Figure 3 — Balanced volt-seconds enable reset and stable Vg. Imbalance accumulates flux walk, increases droop, and can drive saturation signatures.

H2-4. Transformer Equivalent Model: Leakage L, Magnetizing L, Interwinding C (and Their Failure Signatures)

The GDT behaves like a power transfer element plus a parasitic injection network. A minimal equivalent model ties field symptoms (ringing, slow turn-off, dv/dt false turn-on) to specific parasitics and the fastest verification actions.

Minimal Equivalent Model (only what matters for gate drive)

  • Lm (magnetizing inductance): sets droop and reset margin. Too low → droop increases and saturation risk rises.
  • Llk (leakage inductance): drives resonance with gate-loop capacitance/inductance. Higher Llk → stronger ringing and overshoot.
  • Cps (primary-to-secondary capacitance): common-mode injection path under dv/dt. Higher Cps → larger gate disturbance risk.
  • Cpw/Csw (winding capacitances): shapes high-frequency edges and can amplify ringing/EMI if poorly damped.
  • Secondary load: shaping + clamp + split Rg and the gate loop. High impedance during turn-off increases susceptibility.

Scope rule: this chapter links parasitics to symptoms and verification actions. Protection mechanism internals (DESAT/UVLO logic) remain in protection-focused pages.

Failure Signature Cards (symptom → likely parasitic → fastest proof → fix)

Signature 1 — Slow Turn-Off Tail

Likely parasitic: Lm too small and/or turn-off discharge path too weak (effective impedance too high).

Quick check: measure Vg discharge slope (Kelvin) and compare channels; check if tail worsens at higher duty or temperature.

Fix: lower turn-off impedance, strengthen synchronous discharge/clamp path, increase Lm margin if droop is dominant.

Pass criteria: turn-off transition ≤ X ns/µs and channel-to-channel spread ≤ Y%.

Signature 2 — Vg Ringing / Overshoot

Likely parasitic: Llk resonating with gate-loop L/C; damping is insufficient or misplaced.

Quick check: step Rg,off or add series damping; if ringing frequency stays similar but amplitude changes, parasitic resonance dominates.

Fix: minimize gate loop, apply controlled damping (series R/ferrite/RC), reduce leakage excitation by layout symmetry.

Pass criteria: overshoot ≤ X V and ringing settles within Y ns.

Signature 3 — dv/dt False Turn-On

Likely parasitic: Cps injection under dv/dt plus a high-impedance gate-off state.

Quick check: dv/dt stress test with gate commanded off; measure Vgs spike magnitude and duration using Kelvin reference.

Fix: strengthen clamp/fast discharge path, reduce off-impedance, control coupling paths (shield/return strategy).

Pass criteria: at dv/dt = X kV/µs, Vgs_peak ≤ Y V (below device turn-on risk threshold).

Fast Verification Actions (no wide tables)

  • Damping sweep: adjust Rg,off / add series damping and record ringing amplitude and settling time.
  • Kelvin vs non-Kelvin probe: confirm measurement integrity; reject conclusions from non-Kelvin waveforms.
  • Single-channel isolation: enable one channel at a time to separate transformer mismatch from layout asymmetry.
  • dv/dt injection test: apply worst-case dv/dt while gate is off; log Vgs spike and recovery.
  • Corner sweep: temperature and supply extremes; check whether droop and primary current signature trend toward saturation.
  • Channel swap test: swap secondary networks (controlled) to determine whether the symptom follows the transformer or the channel circuitry.

Attribution rule: “same symptom, different knob response” distinguishes dominant parasitics. Damping changes ringing amplitude quickly; Lm limitations show as droop and duty sensitivity.

Equivalent model mapping parasitics to symptoms Block diagram of a gate drive transformer with Lm, Llk, Cps/Cpw and a secondary load. Arrows indicate droop path via Lm, ringing path via Llk and gate loop, and dv/dt injection path via Cps. Primary Driver Push-pull source GDT Equivalent Llk Leakage Lm Magnetizing Cps P↔S Cw Winding C Barrier Secondary Network Shaping + Clamp Split Rg Gate Loop Lg + Cg + Rg Kelvin return Droop ← Lm Ringing ← Llk dv/dt injection ← Cps Minimal model ties symptoms to knobs: droop (Lm), ringing (Llk + gate loop), dv/dt false turn-on (Cps + off-impedance)

Figure 4 — Parasitic-to-symptom map for GDT drive. Use the fastest knob response (damping, duty sensitivity, dv/dt test) to identify the dominant path.

H2-5. Synchronous Secondary Networks: Fast Discharge, Clamp, and Optional Negative Gate

“Synchronous secondary” becomes real only when the secondary network guarantees a strong, repeatable turn-off path, clamps Vgs stress under ringing, and (when required) adds negative gate margin against dv/dt-induced false turn-on.

Core Objective (two auditable outcomes)

  • Turn-off strength: Vg discharges from VON to VOFF within X ns/µs using Kelvin gate-source measurement.
  • Repeatability: channel-to-channel turn-off delay/shape mismatch ≤ Y ns and Vg amplitude mismatch ≤ Z%.

Scope rule: this chapter focuses on secondary current paths and device stress. Switch-technology specifics (SiC/GaN/IGBT) are referenced only as sensitivity hints and belong to dedicated switch pages.

Current Paths & Stress Points (what must be controlled)

  • Turn-on charge path: drives gate charge quickly but must not excite uncontrolled ringing. Keep turn-on and turn-off paths explicitly separated when split resistors are used.
  • Turn-off discharge path: the primary safety path. Low impedance, shortest return loop, and consistent behavior across channels are mandatory.
  • Clamp / reverse-current path: absorbs overshoot energy and suppresses dv/dt-induced disturbance. The clamp element must tolerate reverse gate current and peak power.
Turn-off impedance
Require a defined low-impedance discharge path. Validate with Vg discharge slope and settle time (X/Y placeholders).
Clamp level
Set clamp voltage and ensure Vgs_peak ≤ X V and overshoot settles within Y ns.
Reverse gate current
Confirm clamp/discharge elements tolerate Irev_peak ≤ X A and thermal stress within limits.
Off-state dv/dt
At dv/dt = X kV/µs, require Vgs_spike ≤ Y V and no false turn-on.

Three Implementation Families (trade-offs)

A) Diode Steering / Passive Shaping

  • Speed: moderate; turn-off strength depends on effective discharge impedance and parasitics.
  • Loss: diode conduction and recovery can add heating under high frequency edges.
  • Complexity: low; fewer active failure modes.
  • Consistency: sensitive to layout and tolerance; channel symmetry must be verified, not assumed.

Use when simplicity and robustness dominate, and when measured turn-off tail and dv/dt immunity meet X/Y acceptance gates.

B) Active Synchronous Discharge / Clamp

  • Speed: strong and programmable; can enforce deterministic turn-off behavior.
  • Loss: switching losses move into the clamp/discharge element; thermal design must be validated.
  • Complexity: higher; introduces additional device stress and fault modes.
  • Consistency: best repeatability when driven and laid out symmetrically across channels.

Prefer when false turn-on margin is tight and turn-off path must remain strong under dv/dt and temperature corners.

C) Add −Vg Rail + Clamp (optional)

  • Speed: strongest off-state margin; improves robustness against dv/dt-induced gate disturbance.
  • Loss: depends on clamp strategy and reverse current handling; may increase dissipated energy in the clamp path.
  • Complexity: highest; −Vg reference integrity and noise control become first-class constraints.
  • Consistency: requires strict symmetry and verified reference/return strategy across channels.

Consider when dv/dt tests show Vgs_spike approaching risk thresholds, or when off-state margin must be widened to meet system safety targets.

Acceptance Checkpoints (measurable gates)

  • Discharge impedance: no long turn-off tail; Vg reaches VOFF within X and remains stable.
  • Clamp behavior: Vgs_peak ≤ X V and ringing settles within Y ns under worst-case load.
  • Reverse-current capability: clamp/discharge elements survive Irev_peak ≤ X A with acceptable temperature rise.
  • Off-state dv/dt immunity: at X kV/µs, Vgs_spike ≤ Y V and no false turn-on events.

Gate sensitivity hint: devices with low Vth and high dv/dt environments typically demand stronger off-state impedance control; detailed device-specific guidance belongs to switch-technology pages.

Three secondary network families Three columns show A diode steering, B active synchronous discharge, and C optional negative gate rail plus clamp. Arrows emphasize turn-on, turn-off, and clamp paths. A) Diode Steering B) Sync Discharge C) −Vg + Clamp From GDT secondary From GDT secondary From GDT secondary Diode steering Rg,on Rg,off Clamp Gate (Cg) Kelvin source Turn-on Turn-off Sync discharge Rg,on Rg,off Active clamp Gate (Cg) Kelvin source Steering + clamp Rg,on Rg,off Clamp −Vg rail Gate (Cg) Kelvin source Thin arrow: turn-on. Thick arrow: turn-off discharge. Dashed arrow: clamp path.

Figure 5 — Three secondary network families. The differentiator is turn-off discharge impedance and clamp behavior under ringing and dv/dt stress.

H2-6. Timing & Symmetry: Multi-Switch Coordination, Deadtime, and Channel Matching

In multi-switch stages, symmetry is a safety specification. Small differences in winding, layout, or secondary impedance translate into measurable delay and droop mismatch, which can break deadtime assumptions and increase shoot-through risk.

Why Symmetry Is a Safety Spec

  • Turn-off weaker on one leg → effective deadtime shrinks → cross-conduction risk increases.
  • Turn-on delay mismatch → PWM timing resolution degrades → current ripple and loss increase.
  • Vg amplitude mismatch → different effective switching speed → thermal imbalance and drift.

Validation rule: matching must be proven by measurement. Identical schematics do not guarantee identical gate waveforms.

Matching Checklist (auditable acceptance gates)

1) Turn-on Delay Matching

Measure: PWM edge → Vgs crosses a defined threshold (Kelvin TP).

Fix knobs: equalize secondary impedance, minimize gate loop differences, match drive path lengths.

Pass criteria: inter-channel Δt_on ≤ X ns across corners.

2) Turn-off Delay Matching

Measure: off command → Vgs falls below the same threshold (Kelvin TP).

Fix knobs: strengthen and match discharge paths, match clamp behavior, reduce parasitic spread.

Pass criteria: inter-channel Δt_off ≤ X ns (often the primary safety metric).

3) Vg Amplitude Matching

Measure: Vg_peak and plateau level using Kelvin gate-source probe.

Fix knobs: match winding coupling and loading, avoid asymmetric clamp engagement.

Pass criteria: |Vg_peak,ch − Vg_peak,ref| ≤ Y%.

4) Droop Slope Matching

Measure: droop slope over the same on-time window for all channels.

Fix knobs: improve Lm margin, match secondary impedance, enforce reset symmetry.

Pass criteria: droop slope mismatch ≤ Z% and no trend drift with duty.

Deadtime Gate (only the hard rule)

  • Hardware interlock is mandatory for half-bridge/full-bridge coordination.
  • Deadtime budget must cover worst-case turn-off skew and waveform variation.
  • If matching cannot be proven, deadtime must be conservative, increasing loss and thermal stress.

Detailed deadtime strategies belong to the dedicated Deadtime & Shoot-Through Interlock page. This chapter defines the measurement gates that deadtime must cover.

Field Validation Playbook (3-step)

  1. Baseline capture: record all channels Vgs with Kelvin TP points under the same load and timing.
  2. Corner sweep: temperature, supply, and duty extremes; log Δt_on, Δt_off, Vg_peak, droop slope.
  3. Stress injection: dv/dt and load transients; confirm no false turn-on and no collapse of turn-off strength.
Channel matching measurement blueprint Three parallel channels each show GDT secondary, secondary network, and gate block. Test points TP_G and TP_KS are marked. Skew arrows indicate delta timing between channels. Multi-channel symmetry: measure Δt_on / Δt_off / Vg_peak / droop slope at identical test points CH1 CH2 CH3 GDT secondary Secondary network Gate (Vg) Kelvin return TP_G TP_KS GDT secondary Secondary network Gate (Vg) Kelvin return TP_G TP_KS GDT secondary Secondary network Gate (Vg) Kelvin return TP_G TP_KS Skew Δt Skew Δt Compare channels at TP_G and TP_KS. Record Δt_on, Δt_off, Vg_peak, and droop slope across corners.

Figure 6 — Channel matching blueprint. Symmetry must be validated at identical Kelvin test points, then budgeted into deadtime and safety margins.

H2-7. Isolation & dv/dt Immunity (CMTI) — What GDT Solves, What It Doesn’t

A gate-drive transformer can reduce certain cross-domain couplings, but dv/dt immunity is still set by displacement-current paths, reference integrity, and the return loop that closes common-mode current. This chapter maps the coupling paths and the knobs that remain controllable.

Expectation Calibration

What GDT Helps

  • Decouples DC bias supply crossing in some architectures (signal energy transferred magnetically).
  • Supports high dv/dt environments when coupling paths are deliberately controlled (winding + layout).
  • Enables compact isolated gate delivery without relying on a dedicated isolated driver IC (system choice, not a replacement).

What GDT Does Not Automatically Fix

  • Cps injection: primary-to-secondary capacitance still injects displacement current under dv/dt.
  • Gate reference drift: shared impedance and return mixing can lift the apparent Vgs.
  • Common-mode EMI: coupling often shifts locations; the CM loop still must be engineered and verified.

Scope rule: no isolation standards, creepage/clearance, or isolated-driver CMTI scorecards here. This chapter stays on GDT-specific coupling paths and measurable immunity outcomes.

Coupling Paths (3-path map)

Path 1 — Cps Injection (dominant dv/dt path)

Source: HS switch node dv/dt.

Coupling: interwinding capacitance Cps (primary ↔ secondary).

Victim: secondary reference and gate loop.

Result: Vgs spike (gate is lifted) and larger common-mode current.

Path 2 — Shield / Layer-to-Layer Coupling (trade-off path)

Source: high field gradients around switching edges.

Coupling: shield capacitance / layer coupling changing where the CM loop closes.

Victim: secondary reference or chassis/ground depending on termination strategy.

Result: dv/dt immunity can improve, but CM EMI spectrum may shift and must be re-validated.

Path 3 — Reference Drift (return-path dominated)

Source: ground bounce and shared-impedance return under fast current edges.

Coupling: return mixing between power and gate reference paths.

Victim: gate-source reference (Kelvin integrity).

Result: measured Vgs deviates from device-effective Vgs; false turn-on risk increases.

Two Risks (measurable acceptance gates)

Risk 1 — dv/dt false turn-on
Test: command gate OFF, apply dv/dt = X kV/µs, measure Kelvin Vgs_spike peak & duration. Pass: Vgs_spike ≤ Y V and no false turn-on over N repeats.
Risk 2 — EMI / radiation worsens
Test: compare common-mode current probe / near-field scan before and after knob changes. Pass: CM peak reduced by ≥ X dB in the target band and no new dominant hotspot appears.

Verification rule: dv/dt immunity and EMI must be validated together. Improving one path can relocate the other if the CM loop closure changes.

Knobs That Stay Controllable (action → impact → trade-off)

  • Reduce Cps (winding/structure): lowers displacement injection; trade-off is magnetic implementation complexity.
  • Shield strategy (termination): moves CM loop closure; trade-off is EMI spectrum shift that must be re-tested.
  • Kelvin return integrity: hardens Vgs reference; trade-off is stricter routing and partition constraints.
  • Strong off-impedance + clamp: suppresses Vgs spikes; trade-off is clamp stress and dissipation.
  • Minimize gate loop area: reduces induced voltage; trade-off is layout freedom and component placement constraints.
  • Partition high dv/dt zones: reduces field coupling; trade-off is stack-up complexity and routing detours.
Common-mode coupling map and controllable knobs HS switch node injects displacement current via Cps and shield coupling into the secondary/gate loop. Return mixing causes reference drift. Knob tags mark where to intervene. HS Switch Node dv/dt source Coupling Paths Cps P↔S injection Shield strategy Shared return / reference mixing Reference drift Vgs appears lifted Secondary / Gate Loop Gate (Cg) Clamp Kelvin return reference Common-mode loop Reduce Cps Shield strategy Clamp strength Kelvin return Loop area Map the injection, then verify dv/dt immunity and EMI together using the same acceptance gates.

Figure 7 — Common-mode coupling map for GDT drive. Cps injection, shield coupling, and return mixing define Vgs spikes and EMI. Knobs mark where control remains possible.

H2-8. Primary Driver Stage Design: Drive Voltage, Current, and Core Excitation Budget

The primary stage must close an excitation and power budget: Vpri, pulse width, and frequency must deliver the required gate energy while maintaining reset margin, avoiding saturation signatures, and keeping driver and transformer losses within thermal limits.

Primary Design Inputs (what must be specified)

Drive & Timing

  • Vpri: primary drive amplitude (sets excitation and transfer headroom).
  • f: effective pulse repetition / switching frequency.
  • Duty / pulse width: sets reset margin and droop behavior (see volt-second constraints).

Primary Switch/Stage Capability

  • Ipri_peak: peak current capability and any limit strategy.
  • Rds_on / Rdrive: conduction loss and edge control.
  • Overlap control: prevent push-pull shoot-through under timing skew.

Constraint reminder: volt-second balance and reset margin dominate saturation risk; validation uses primary current trend and Vg stability under worst duty corners.

Excitation & Saturation Gates (auditable checks)

  • Peak magnetizing / primary current: Ipri_peak ≤ X A at worst duty and temperature.
  • No drift signature: no cycle-to-cycle growth of Ipri_peak over N cycles (reset margin proven).
  • Waveform integrity: Vpri and Ipri edges show no abnormal collapse or clipping in the on-window.
  • Thermal limit: primary-stage temperature rise ≤ X °C at steady state.

Power Budget Card (flow must close)

Gate delivery
Required gate energy per second ≈ Qg_total × Vg × f (placeholder model). Target P_gate = X W.
Transformer losses
P_xfmr = core loss + copper loss + leakage-related dissipation. Budget ≤ Y W and validate by temperature rise.
Primary driver losses
P_driver = conduction + switching + overlap margin. Budget ≤ Z W and validate by device temperature.
Closure rule
Require P_in ≈ P_gate + P_xfmr + P_driver within X% accounting error, with stable waveforms and thermal margins.

Validation Flow (budget-driven)

  1. Measure Vpri and Ipri: record waveforms and Ipri_peak under nominal and worst duty corners.
  2. Check reset margin: sweep duty and temperature; confirm no Ipri_peak drift over N cycles.
  3. Estimate budget blocks: compute placeholder P_gate and compare to measured input and thermal data.
  4. Thermal acceptance: confirm primary driver and transformer temperature rise meets X/Y limits at steady state.

Link rule: primary knobs (Vpri, f, duty) affect both saturation risk and coupling/EMI behavior. Any knob change must re-check dv/dt immunity gates from H2-7.

Primary-stage budget flow Power flows from input supply through primary driver into the transformer and finally into gate charge delivery. Loss blocks and measurement points show how to close the budget. Input supply P_in Primary driver Vpri / Ipri push-pull stage GDT transfer + excitation Gate delivery Qg × Vg × f P_gate Driver loss Core loss Copper loss TP: Vpri TP: Ipri TP: Temp Knobs: Vpri Knobs: f Knobs: duty Knobs: Rdrive Knobs: limit Close the budget: P_in ≈ P_gate + P_xfmr + P_driver, then validate reset margin and thermal rise.

Figure 8 — Budget flow for the primary stage. Measure Vpri/Ipri and temperatures, allocate losses, and verify reset margin under worst duty corners.

H2-9. Layout & Parasitics: Gate Loop, Kelvin Return, Damping, and Measurement Points

Layout for GDT drive is not generic “good practice.” It is a defined set of loops, references, and measurement points that must stay clean under dv/dt injection. This chapter focuses on secondary-side gate loops, Kelvin reference integrity, damping choices, shield termination, and a single correct Vgs measurement method.

Board Partition (3-zone rule)

  • Power loop zone: HS node and large di/dt return (noise source).
  • Gate drive zone: GDT secondary + secondary shaping + gate loop (sensitive and fast-edge).
  • Sense / control zone: sampling and controller references (must not be a CM loop closure point).

Hard constraint: no return current is allowed to cross partitions. Any “shortcut return” typically becomes the hidden CM loop that lifts the gate reference.

Five Hard Rules (auditable gates)

Rule 1 — Gate loop area ≤ X (relative minimization)

Quick check: gate-to-Kelvin return forms a tight loop on the same layer with immediate return adjacency.

Fix: keep the gate path and Kelvin return paired; avoid detours and long stubs in the secondary network.

Pass criteria: loop length ≤ X mm or loop area ≤ X mm² (placeholder); no partition crossing.

Rule 2 — Kelvin source return must be dedicated

Quick check: Kelvin return does not share copper/through-vias with power-source return or clamp current.

Fix: route a dedicated Kelvin reference back to the secondary reference point; keep it out of CM current closure loops.

Pass criteria: shared-impedance between Kelvin and power return ≤ X mΩ (placeholder) and no shared vias.

Rule 3 — Rg,on / Rg,off placement rule

Quick check: Rg components are placed at the gate pin side, not near the transformer or controller.

Fix: place Rg,on and Rg,off close to the gate; keep routing symmetric across channels.

Pass criteria: Rg-to-gate trace ≤ X mm; channel-to-channel placement mismatch ≤ Y mm (placeholders).

Rule 4 — Damping strategy must be explicit

Quick check: Vgs ringing is measured at Kelvin points; overshoot and settle time are recorded.

Fix: choose one primary damping knob first: series R, ferrite bead, or RC snub in the gate loop.

Pass criteria: Vgs overshoot ≤ X V and ringing settles within Y ns (placeholders) with acceptable temperature rise.

Rule 5 — Measurement point is differential Vgs (Kelvin)

Quick check: Vgs is not measured against power ground; it is measured gate-to-Kelvin source with a differential probe.

Fix: define TP_G and TP_KS at the device pins; keep these test points identical across channels.

Pass criteria: Vgs_spike and delays are repeatable within X% over N repeats (placeholders).

Minimum Measurement Point Set (standardized)

  • TP_G: gate pin neighborhood (device-side).
  • TP_KS: Kelvin source pin neighborhood (device-side).
  • TP_SEC_REF: secondary reference near the secondary shaping network.
  • TP_HS_NODE: HS node (for dv/dt reference only; not a Vgs reference).

Symmetry requirement: all channels must use the same test-point definitions to support matching gates and deadtime budgeting.

Bring-up / Production Acceptance (example gates)

  • Waveform quality: Vgs overshoot ≤ X V, ringing settle ≤ Y ns.
  • dv/dt immunity: dv/dt = X kV/µs with gate OFF, Vgs_spike ≤ Y V at Kelvin points.
  • Channel symmetry: Δt_on and Δt_off skew ≤ X ns across corners.
PCB partition, gate loop, Kelvin return, and measurement points Three zones separate noisy power loops from sensitive gate and control. Correct Kelvin return stays local. Incorrect return crossing partitions is marked as forbidden. TP_G and TP_KS define the only valid Vgs measurement. Power loop zone HS node / di/dt Gate drive zone GDT secondary + loop Sense / control clean reference HS switch stage Power return GDT secondary Secondary network Gate device Kelvin source Kelvin return Gate loop stays local TP_G TP_KS NO crossing Controller / ADC Clean ref Measure Vgs only across TP_G–TP_KS. Keep Kelvin return inside the gate-drive zone; do not cross partitions.

Figure 9 — GDT-specific layout discipline. Partition power, gate, and control; keep Kelvin return dedicated; define TP_G/TP_KS and use differential Vgs measurement.

H2-10. Applications Playbook: Pulsed Power / RF Supplies / Very-High Isolation Stacks

This chapter is a field playbook: when GDT drive is the better choice, the minimum viable architecture, and the first validation gates. It avoids expanding into generic PFC/LLC textbooks and stays within pulsed/RF, very-high isolation stacks, and strong dv/dt environments.

Bucket 1 — Pulsed Power / RF Supplies

  • When it wins: short pulses, high repetition, and isolation with low control-side burden.
  • Minimum architecture: PWM/controller → primary push-pull → GDT → per-switch secondary network → gate.
  • Primary constraint: reset margin and pulse symmetry under the maximum effective duty.
  • First validation: Vgs overshoot ≤ X V, settle ≤ Y ns, and no Vg droop beyond X V in the on-window.
  • Common signature: ringing grows with pulse width → suspect leakage + loop inductance and damping selection.

Bucket 2 — Very-High Isolation Stacks

  • When it wins: stacked/segmented isolation domains where DC bias crossing is undesirable.
  • Minimum architecture: isolated controller domain → primary driver local supply → GDT boundary → floating secondary gate delivery.
  • Primary constraint: reference integrity and controlled CM loop closure (shield termination matters).
  • First validation: TP_KS reference drift stays within X V and dv/dt-induced Vgs_spike ≤ Y V at gate OFF.
  • Common signature: lab-to-lab EMI differences → suspect shield/return termination and partition crossings.

Bucket 3 — Strong dv/dt Environments

  • When it wins: hard-switching nodes with dv/dt so high that reference drift and Cps injection become first-order risks.
  • Minimum architecture: primary stage tuned for symmetry + secondary off-impedance strong clamp + dedicated Kelvin return.
  • Primary constraint: Cps injection and CM loop closure must be engineered, not assumed.
  • First validation: dv/dt = X kV/µs with gate OFF: Vgs_spike ≤ Y V and no false turn-on over N repeats.
  • Common signature: emissions improve but false turn-on worsens (or vice versa) → knob moved CM loop closure location.

Practical linkage: any application bucket must pass the same Kelvin Vgs measurement rule and partition constraints defined in H2-9.

Application mini-blocks and first validation gates Three parallel system mini-blocks highlight where the GDT sits, where noise coupling paths exist, and what should be validated first for each application bucket. Pulsed / RF High isolation stack High dv/dt Controller / PWM Primary driver GDT Switch stage First validation Vgs settle / droop Noise path Isolation Controller / PWM Primary driver GDT Floating stage First validation Ref drift / Vgs Noise path Isolation Controller / PWM Primary driver GDT Hard-switch node First validation dv/dt Vgs spike Noise path Isolation Each bucket uses the same core gates: Kelvin Vgs measurement, reset margin, dv/dt immunity, and channel symmetry.

Figure 10 — Application playbook mini-blocks. Identify the isolation boundary, map the noise path, and validate the first gate before expanding the design.

H2-11. Key Specs & Selection Logic (for This Topology)

This selection logic is GDT-specific: the primary must guarantee symmetric excitation and reset margin, while the secondary must deliver strong turn-off under dv/dt injection. The goal is a go/no-go workflow that prevents late-stage dead ends in magnetics and layout.

Selection Inputs (what must be fixed before committing)

Channel count Isolation boundary Max effective duty Reset window Turn-off strength dv/dt environment Test hooks
1) Channel count & isolation requirement
Define how many gates per transformer (single / dual / multi-secondary) and where isolation boundaries sit. Go when creepage/clearance and domain partition are frozen; No-go when boundaries still move.
2) Frequency & max effective duty (reset margin)
Verify a reset window exists and maximum effective duty stays below the saturation-risk threshold. Go if duty ≤ X% and reset is guaranteed; No-go if duty can park high with uncertain reset.
3) Required gate current & turn-off strength
Ensure the secondary sink path can pull charge fast enough across temperature and dv/dt conditions. Go if Ioff_peak ≥ X A and droop ≤ Y V within Z ns/µs; No-go if turn-off is weak or inconsistent.
4) dv/dt environment → shielding / clamp / Kelvin requirements
Decide mandatory knobs: shield termination strategy, clamp level, and dedicated Kelvin return. Go if off-state Vgs_spike ≤ X V at dv/dt = Y kV/µs; No-go if false turn-on cannot be bounded.
5) Validation & production test hooks
Standardize TP_G/TP_KS and define skew/droop/dv/dt injection gates before routing begins. Go when measurement is repeatable and channel symmetry gates exist; No-go when “probe luck” changes conclusions.

If any node is a hard No-go (especially duty/reset), an isolated driver IC architecture is typically faster than forcing a GDT into an unsuitable regime.

Reference BOM (example material numbers)

These are representative, widely available parts for building and validating a GDT driver path. Final values depend on gate charge, target edge rate, and isolation constraints.

Gate-drive transformer (GDT)
Würth: 760301103 (WE-GDT series), 750319496 (WE-AGDT series)
Pulse: PMT9085.011NLT (PMT9085 series)
Primary excitation options
Push-pull PWM controller (symmetry-focused): UCC2808A-1 (TI)
Transformer driver (compact push-pull source): SN6505B (TI)
High peak drive for primary MOSFETs: UCC27322 (TI)
Logic / symmetry helpers (optional)
D-type flip-flop for clean complementary timing: 74LVC2G74GN (Nexperia)
Secondary shaping (typical building blocks)
Gate resistors (pulse-capable, example series): Panasonic ERJ-8EN / Vishay CRCW1206 (value-coded by design)
Ferrite bead for damping (example): Murata BLM18AG121SH1D
Fast steering diodes (examples, select by peak pulse current): Nexperia PMEG series / Vishay SS series
Gate clamp TVS (examples, select by Vgs limits): Littelfuse SMBJ series / Vishay SMBJ series
Bring-up measurement tooling (examples)
Differential probe for Kelvin Vgs: Keysight N2790A or Tektronix TDP1000 (select bandwidth/CM range)
Current probe for pulse profiling: Tektronix TCP0030A (example)

Production note: the transformer part number defines leakage, magnetizing inductance, and isolation behavior; lock the GDT family early and validate with dv/dt injection gates before scaling channels.

GDT selection decision flow (go/no-go) Five decision nodes with explicit go/no-go conditions using X/Y/N placeholders. Go path proceeds to GDT implementation gates. No-go path suggests alternative isolated driver IC architecture. Start: GDT fit check A) Isolation boundary stable? Go: partition fixed · No-go: boundary moving B) Duty & reset margin OK? Go: duty ≤ X% with reset · No-go: reset uncertain C) Turn-off strength meets target? Go: Ioff ≥ X A, droop ≤ Y V · No-go: weak / inconsistent D) dv/dt immunity measurable? Go: Vgs_spike ≤ X V @ Y kV/µs · No-go: false turn-on Proceed with GDT gates No-go choose isolated Alternative Isolated driver IC

Figure 11 — GDT-specific selection flow. Each node is a go/no-go gate using placeholders (X/Y). No-go suggests switching to an isolated driver IC architecture.

H2-12. Engineering Checklist (Design → Bring-up → Production)

This checklist consolidates the critical actions from previous chapters into auditable gates. Each stage is written to be executable and measurable, with placeholders for thresholds (X/Y/N).

Design (magnetics / secondary / symmetry / layout)

  • Lock GDT family and ratio; validate ∫Vdt capability vs max effective duty and reset window (X/Y).
  • Choose a primary excitation path with symmetry control (example: UCC2808A-1 or SN6505B as reference options).
  • Define secondary network type (diode steering / active discharge / optional −Vg) and clamp target (X V).
  • Dimension turn-off path for peak sink current and predictable Vgs droop (Ioff ≥ X A, droop ≤ Y V in Z).
  • Define damping knob (series R / bead / RC) and acceptance goal (overshoot ≤ X V, settle ≤ Y ns).
  • Layout rules: dedicated Kelvin return; no partition crossing; TP_G/TP_KS standardized for every channel.
  • dv/dt knobs locked: shield termination plan, Cps injection path review, and clamp robustness under worst dv/dt.

Design reference parts (examples): GDT 760301103 / 750319496 / PMT9085.011NLT, ferrite bead BLM18AG121SH1D, primary driver options UCC2808A-1, SN6505B, and high peak gate driver UCC27322.

Bring-up (waveforms / droop / skew / dv/dt injection)

  • Measure Vgs using differential Kelvin points (TP_G–TP_KS); document probe and ground strategy.
  • Verify volt-second balance: complementary pulses mismatch ≤ X% and reset window visible in waveforms.
  • Validate droop: ΔVgs ≤ X V within Y ns/µs across temperature corners.
  • Validate ringing: overshoot ≤ X V and settle ≤ Y ns after both turn-on and turn-off edges.
  • Validate channel matching: Δt_on / Δt_off skew ≤ X ns; amplitude mismatch ≤ Y%.
  • dv/dt injection test: dv/dt = X kV/µs with gate OFF → Vgs_spike ≤ Y V and no false turn-on over N repeats.
  • Damping iteration: change one knob at a time; log before/after overshoot, settle, and thermal impact.
Bring-up tooling (example material numbers)
Differential probe: Keysight N2790A / Tektronix TDP1000
Current probe: Tektronix TCP0030A (example)

Production (sampling / aging / fault injection / documentation)

  • Channel consistency sampling: droop slope and peak Vgs within Y% across batch; skew within X ns.
  • Thermal drift check: repeat key gates at hot/cold corners; ensure Vgs and timing remain within limits.
  • dv/dt immunity sampling: verify off-state Vgs_spike gate at dv/dt = X kV/µs; no false turn-on.
  • Fault injection rehearsal: forced asymmetry / missing pulse / clamp open (simulate) → safe response documented.
  • Assembly controls: transformer orientation/polarity verified; secondary network placements match golden layout.
  • Documentation pack: test-point map, measurement method, acceptance thresholds, and EMI/isolation notes.
3-stage engineering checklist (short labels) Three columns summarize the design, bring-up, and production gates as short checkbox labels for fast review. Design Bring-up Production ☐ Reset margin (duty ≤ X%) ☐ GDT family locked ☐ Secondary network chosen ☐ Clamp target (Vgs ≤ X) ☐ Kelvin return dedicated ☐ Damping knob defined ☐ TP_G / TP_KS standardized ☐ Kelvin Vgs measurement ☐ Droop ≤ X V (in Y) ☐ Overshoot ≤ X V ☐ Settle ≤ Y ns ☐ Skew ≤ X ns ☐ dv/dt = X kV/µs gate OFF ☐ No false turn-on (N runs) ☐ Batch symmetry sampling ☐ Hot/cold drift check ☐ dv/dt immunity sampling ☐ Fault injection rehearsal ☐ Polarity / orientation check ☐ Golden layout conformance ☐ Documentation pack ready Gates use placeholders (X/Y/N). Standardize TP_G–TP_KS and validate dv/dt immunity before scaling channels.

Figure 12 — Three-stage checklist. Short labels keep the diagram readable on mobile while preserving auditable gates (X/Y/N placeholders).

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H2-13. FAQs (10–12) — fixed 4-line answers + FAQPage JSON-LD

Scope: field troubleshooting and acceptance criteria only. Each item is exactly four lines: Likely cause / Quick check / Fix / Pass criteria (placeholders X/Y/N). No new knowledge domain is introduced.

Threshold Placeholder Legend (standardized)

X_DUTY_PCT max effective duty X_IMB_PCT pulse imbalance X_DROOP_V Vgs droop Y_ON_US on-window X_OVS_V Vgs overshoot Y_SET_NS settle time X_SKEW_NS channel skew X_VAR_PCT unit-to-unit variation X_DVDT_KVUS dv/dt injection Y_SPIKE_V off-state Vgs spike N_HITS repeat count X_TEMP_C hot corner Y_RISE_C temp rise X_EMI_DB EMI delta

Measurement rule: Vgs acceptance must use differential measurement across TP_GTP_KS (Kelvin).

Gate amplitude droops during long on-time — is it Lm too low or secondary discharge path?

Likely cause: magnetizing current ramps due to low effective Lm and/or reset margin is insufficient; secondary on-path impedance increases droop slope.

Quick check: measure Vgs at TP_G–TP_KS, log droop slope vs on-time; verify complementary primary pulse symmetry and visible reset window.

Fix: reduce secondary impedance (gate loop + Rg_on placement), ensure guaranteed reset (limit duty or enforce symmetry), then re-evaluate GDT Lm/turns if needed.

Pass criteria: ΔVgs droop ≤ X_DROOP_V within Y_ON_US at worst on-time, and pulse imbalance ≤ X_IMB_PCT.

One channel turns off slower than others — winding mismatch or Rg placement?

Likely cause: channel-to-channel winding/leakage mismatch and/or asymmetric secondary network (Rg_off distance, clamp return, Kelvin return sharing impedance).

Quick check: measure t_off at TP_G–TP_KS for all channels; compare Rg_off placement and loop length; swap channel connections to see if delay follows GDT or PCB.

Fix: make secondary networks and routing identical; move Rg_off to the gate pin area; dedicate Kelvin return; tighten GDT tolerance if the mismatch follows the transformer.

Pass criteria: Δt_off skew ≤ X_SKEW_NS and Vgs amplitude variation ≤ X_VAR_PCT.

Core runs hot / Vg collapses at high duty — reset missing or volt-second imbalance?

Likely cause: missing reset window or volt-second imbalance drives flux bias toward saturation; rising magnetizing current heats the core and collapses delivered Vgs.

Quick check: capture primary waveforms and compare pulse area (∫Vdt) between complementary phases; observe primary current ramp and confirm a reset interval exists.

Fix: enforce symmetric excitation and guaranteed reset (sequence + duty limit), then increase turns/core size only after symmetry/reset are proven.

Pass criteria: max effective duty ≤ X_DUTY_PCT with verified reset and pulse imbalance ≤ X_IMB_PCT; core temp rise ≤ Y_RISE_C at X_TEMP_C.

dv/dt event causes false turn-on — Cps injection or clamp too weak?

Likely cause: interwinding/stray capacitance injects displacement current into the secondary reference, lifting Vgs; off-state clamp/turn-off impedance is insufficient.

Quick check: apply dv/dt injection at X_DVDT_KVUS with gate OFF; measure off-state Vgs spike at TP_G–TP_KS and repeat N_HITS times.

Fix: strengthen off-state clamp and turn-off path (lower off impedance, optional −Vg), and relocate shield/return closures to avoid CM loop formation.

Pass criteria: Vgs_spike ≤ Y_SPIKE_V at dv/dt = X_DVDT_KVUS, and no false turn-on across N_HITS hits.

Ringing increases after layout change — Llk vs gate loop inductance, which dominates?

Likely cause: increased gate loop inductance and/or reduced damping raises resonance Q; leakage inductance plus loop inductance dominates the ringing.

Quick check: remeasure Vgs at TP_G–TP_KS, compare ringing frequency and settle time; inspect loop length/return adjacency and Rg placement changes.

Fix: shrink gate loop and re-place Rg at the gate pin; add one explicit damping knob (series R, ferrite bead, or RC) and iterate with logged before/after metrics.

Pass criteria: Vgs overshoot ≤ X_OVS_V and ringing settles ≤ Y_SET_NS after both turn-on and turn-off edges.

Works at room temp, fails hot — copper loss/drive strength drop or saturation margin?

Likely cause: primary/secondary copper loss and driver Rds_on increase reduce drive headroom; saturation/reset margin tightens at hot, amplifying droop and skew.

Quick check: hot-soak at X_TEMP_C and repeat the same Kelvin Vgs measurements (amplitude, droop, skew); record core temperature rise and primary current ramp.

Fix: increase drive headroom or reduce losses (lower series resistance, improve loop), then revalidate reset margin; adjust turns/core only after headroom is confirmed.

Pass criteria: at X_TEMP_C, Vgs amplitude stays within X_VAR_PCT and droop ≤ X_DROOP_V within Y_ON_US; core temp rise ≤ Y_RISE_C.

EMI got worse after adding shield — shield termination created CM current loop?

Likely cause: shield termination point forces common-mode displacement current to close through a sensitive reference path, increasing radiated/CM emissions.

Quick check: compare EMI peaks before/after shield and verify dv/dt OFF-state Vgs spike remains bounded; inspect whether the shield connection crosses partitions or ties to a noisy reference.

Fix: move shield termination to a controlled CM closure point and eliminate partition-crossing returns; keep Kelvin reference isolated from shield current paths.

Pass criteria: EMI delta ≤ X_EMI_DB while dv/dt = X_DVDT_KVUS still meets Vgs_spike ≤ Y_SPIKE_V (no false turn-on over N_HITS).

Turn-off is fast but overshoots gate — clamp reference or parasitic resonance?

Likely cause: clamp return is not Kelvin-clean, or parasitic resonance is underdamped; aggressive turn-off current excites leakage + loop inductance.

Quick check: measure overshoot at TP_G–TP_KS and compare with non-Kelvin probing; inspect clamp placement and whether its return shares power-source impedance.

Fix: relocate clamp to a Kelvin reference and add damping (series R/bead/RC); tune Rg_off only after the clamp reference is corrected.

Pass criteria: Vgs overshoot ≤ X_OVS_V and settles ≤ Y_SET_NS at worst-case load and temperature.

Startup sometimes misfires — initial flux bias or asymmetric drive sequencing?

Likely cause: initial flux bias plus an asymmetric first few cycles (one-sided excitation) consumes reset margin and causes inconsistent secondary delivery.

Quick check: capture the first 5–10 cycles; compare complementary pulse areas and sequence ordering; verify reset interval presence from the first cycle.

Fix: enforce symmetric startup sequencing (complementary gating) and add a defined pre-reset/soft-start pattern before enabling full drive.

Pass criteria: startup misfires ≤ X_FAILS in N_STARTS attempts, and first-cycle imbalance ≤ X_IMB_PCT.

Half-bridge shoot-through despite deadtime — channel skew or secondary network asymmetry?

Likely cause: effective skew exceeds programmed deadtime and/or the two secondary networks are not symmetric, shifting real edges under dv/dt stress.

Quick check: measure both legs’ turn-on/turn-off edges at TP_G–TP_KS and compute effective deadtime margin; verify hardware interlock is active under faults.

Fix: match the two secondary networks and routing (Rg placement + Kelvin); add/verify hard interlock; increase deadtime only after skew sources are minimized.

Pass criteria: Δt skew ≤ X_SKEW_NS and deadtime ≥ X_SKEW_NS + Y_MARGIN_NS across temperature and dv/dt corners.

Scope shows “good Vg” but device still overheats — Vg measured at wrong reference (non-Kelvin)?

Likely cause: non-Kelvin probing masks true Vgs (shared-impedance reference lift); actual overshoot/ringing/false turn-on drives switching loss and heating.

Quick check: remeasure with a differential probe across TP_G–TP_KS and compare to the prior reference; check whether Kelvin return crosses partitions.

Fix: standardize TP_G/TP_KS and enforce dedicated Kelvin routing; remove partition-crossing returns and clamp-to-power-ground shortcuts.

Pass criteria: Kelvin Vgs meets droop/overshoot/settle gates (X_DROOP_V, X_OVS_V, Y_SET_NS) and device temp rise ≤ Y_RISE_C.

Production units vary widely — transformer tolerance or assembly/placement variance?

Likely cause: GDT tolerance/batch variation and assembly variance (orientation/polarity/placement) shift leakage, coupling capacitance, and loop inductance.

Quick check: sample units and record the same three metrics: Vgs amplitude, droop slope, and skew using TP_G–TP_KS; audit transformer polarity/orientation vs golden build.

Fix: lock transformer part number and tighten incoming limits; add assembly poka-yoke for orientation; enforce golden placement and channel symmetry checks in production tests.

Pass criteria: unit-to-unit variation ≤ X_VAR_PCT for amplitude/droop/skew, and production fail rate ≤ Y_FAIL_PCT.